description general points
TRANSCRIPT
DESCRIPTION
Description is a collection of related sentences dealing with a single topic. Although the focus
is on factual accuracy, stylistic creativity and innovation which makes the description more
interesting for the reader. Thus, a description is a writing task in which a person, place, event
or a process is described.
GENERAL POINTS:
A good Descriptive Paragraph needs to have a topic sentence that addresses the main
point and the details that help describe and support the topic sentence which leads to weaving
the Description around.
Use Figurative and precise language.
• Use specific adjectives, nouns and strong action verbs to give life to the picture you
are painting in the reader's mind.
• Good descriptive writing is organized in a proper sequence.
• It contains a concluding sentence that reviews what the paragraph was about.
DESCRIBING A PERSON:
• When describing a person, give physical description, followed by how that person
thinks, feels and acts.
• Be observant and have an eye for details.
• Describe the details in a proper sequence.
• Describe physical appearance, gestures, facial expressions, tone and voice.
• Describe Intellectual qualities: Imaginative, Intelligent, Introvert, Extrovert,
Pessimist, Optimist etc.
• Describe Emotional/ Moral qualities: Trustworthy, Sincere, Confident, Patient.
.
DESCRIPTION OF A PERSON
SAMPLE QUESTION:
The traits of a famous musician are given below. Use these and your own details
and write a Descriptive Paragraph in about 100 -150 words.
A.R Rahman- The Mozart of Madras
A. R. Rahman: Indian composer, singer, songwriter, music producer, musician and
philanthropist; born.in Chennai on 6 January 1967; graduated from Trinity College, Oxford
University; famous in integrating Indian classical music with electronic music, world music
and traditional orchestral arrangements; recipient of the Padmashri and the Padma Vibhushan
awards; two Oscars and a Golden Globe; a notable humanitarian and philanthropist; donates
and raises money for a number of causes and charities.
A.R. Rahman (Allah Rakha Rahman) is an Indian composer, singer, songwriter,
music producer, musician and philanthropist who was born in Chennai on 6 January 1967.
Rahman was earlier known as A.S. Dileep Kumar before he converted from Hinduism to
Islam. He is a graduate from Trinity college, Oxford Univeristy. His extensive body of work
for film and stage earned him the nickname of ‘the Mozart of Madras’. He first debuted with
the movie ‘Roja’.
He is famous in integrating Indian classical music with electronic music,world music and
traditional orchestral arrangements. He is the recipient of the Padmashri and the Padma
Vibhushan awards. He has won two Oscars and a golden globe too. He is a notable
humanitarian and philanthropist. He does a lot of charity work too; he donates and raises
money for a number of causes and charities. Men like him are hard to find.
PRACTICE QUESTION:
Look at the following points and develop them into a descriptive paragraph.
Name : Dr. Kiran Mazumdar Shaw
Parents : Gujarati
Father : Rasendra Mazumdar, formerly head Brewmaster at United Breweries
Education : Schooling from Bishop’s Cotton Girls’ High School Bachelor’s degree
in Zoology from Bangalore University went to the Federation
University (Australia) to study Malting and Brewing (1974) Aspired to
medicine but could not
Chairperson and Managing Director: Biocon Ltd
Chairperson : IIM Bengaluru
Recognition : Honoured with numerous national and international awards
Special achievement : Listing in the Forbes Magazine as most powerful woman in the
world at 77th and 71st position in 2016 and 2017 respectively.
Moments – Chapter 4: In the Kingdom of Fools
Word meanings:
Sneak (verb) – move secretly
Burgle (verb) - to break into
Scrape (noun) – a difficult situation that one has got into
Decree (noun) – a royal order
Mourn (verb) – to express grief Answer the following questions:
Answer the following questions:
Q.1 What are the two strange things the guru and his disciple find in the Kingdom of
Fools?
Ans. The two strange things that the guru and his disciple observe in the kingdom of fools
are:
• Every one sleeps during the day and carry out their work at night.
• The cost to purchase anything from the market was the same, one duddu (one rupee)
whether it was a measure of rice or a bunch of banana it cost the same.
Q.2 Why does the disciple decide to stay in the Kingdom of Fools? Is it a good idea?
Ans. The disciple decided to stay in the Kingdom of Fools because he was delighted that
everything cost a single duddu and everything was very cheap. All that he wanted was
good and very cheap food. According to the Guru, staying there was not a good idea as they
were all fools and so he felt this situation would not last long and was not sure about what
they would do in the future.
Q.3 Name all the people who are tried in the king’s court, and give the reasons for
their trial.
Ans. Following people were tried in the king’s court:
• The merchant whose house was burgled because his house’s wall was weak
and it fell upon the burglar and killed him.
• The bricklayer who built the wall because he built a wall which was weak and which
collapsed killing the burglar.
• The dancing girl because she distracted the bricklayer with her jingling anklets by
walking up and down the road where bricklayer was laying the wall.
• The goldsmith because he didn’t complete the dancing girl’s order on time and so she
had to go to the goldsmith a dozen times.
• The merchant whose house was burgled the second time because his father persuaded
the goldsmith to finish his order first thereby delaying the dancing girl’s order. Since the
merchant’s father died, the merchant had to be executed in his father’s place
• The disciple because the merchant was too thin to be executed by the newly made
stake and a fat man was required to fit in the stake. The disciple was very fat and hence was
caught.
Q.4 Who is the real culprit according to the king? Why does he escape punishment?
Ans. The real culprit according to the king is the merchant because although his old father
was the real murderer but he was dead and someone had to be punished in his place.
So the punishment got transferred to his son for inheriting both wealth and sins from his
father. He escapes the punishment because he is too thin to be properly executed on the stake.
Q.5 What are the Guru’s words of wisdom? When does the disciple remember them?
Ans. The guru’s words of wisdom were that it was the city of fools. He advised the disciple
to leave the city because he would not know what they would do next. The disciple
remembers them when he was going to be executed.
Q.6 How does the guru manage to save his disciple’s life?
Ans. The guru tries to confuse the king by expressing his desire to be killed first. Then to
further confuse the king he tells the story of becoming the king in the next incarnation. He
also said the second to die would become his minister. The king wanted to avail himself of
the opportunity. The guru and his disciple were released. Thus, the guru managed to save his
disciple’s life.
Answer the following questions in about 100-120 words:
1. Fools cannot continue with their follies for long. How can you justify this statement in
relation to the story?
Ans. In the chapter ‘In the Kingdom of Fools’, the king and the minister had made new but
foolish laws for their people. They just wanted to be different from other kings, so they
decided to change day into night and night into day. Also in the kingdom everything was sold
for a single duddu which proved their foolishness. They continued
with their follies until they were caught in their own trap. The justice of the king ended by
ordering his ministers to bring the rich merchant who was found guilty on his father’s behalf,
to be executed on the stake. As the stake did not fit him, the disciple was caught by the orders
of the foolish king just because he was fat enough to fit in the stake. At that moment he
recalled the words of his guru and the guru being a divine figure heard his disciple’s prayers.
He reached there at once and created a drama and skillfully tackled them and not only
managed to save his disciple’s life but also rid the kingdom from the foolish rule. Thus, the
follies of the fools could not continue for long since the king or his minister could not see
through the plan of the wise guru. Not willing to give away his kingdom, the king and his
minister disguised themselves as the guru and his disciple and walked into their self-made
trap.
2 Decisions should be made with a cool and rational mind. Discuss with reference
to the story.
Ans. This story teaches us an important lesson that decisions should be made with a cool
and rational mind. Hasty decisions always have dangerous consequences. The disciple got
tempted by the cheap food available in the Kingdom of Fools and did not pay heed to his
guru’s advice. Instead of thinking rationally, he made a hasty decision to stay
back. Ultimately, he fell a victim to the senseless judgement of the foolish king and came on
the verge of losing his life. If he had taken some time to review his desire to stay back, he
would have certainly realized the importance of the guru’s advice. The king and his
minister’s decision too was taken in haste that cost them their life. If they too had reviewed
their decision of going to the stake to fulfil their greed to be the king and the minister in their
next life, they would have certainly lived as the king and the minister. Thus the story
emphasizes the value of making decisions wisely by weighing all the pros and cons.
Study Material BEEHIVE- Chapter: 6: My Childhood
Word Meanings
innate(adj) – inborn
austere (adj) – simple, strict and severe
downcast(adj.) – sad or depressed
conviction(noun) – a strong opinion or belief
confronted(verb) – meet an enemy face to face
Q.1 What do you think Dinamani is the name of? Give a reason for your answer.
Ans. Dinamani is the name of a daily newspaper, the author traced the stories of the Second
World war in the headlines of the newspaper.
Q.2 Who were Abdul Kalam’s school friends? What did they later become?
Ans. Ramanadha Sastry. Aravindan and Sivaprakasan were Abdul Kalam’s school friends.
Ramanadha took over the priesthood of the Rameswaram temple from his father. Aravindan
went into the business of arranging transport for the visiting pilgrims and Sivaprakasan
became a catering contractor for the Southern Railways.
Q.3 How did Abdul Kalam earn his “first wages”? How did he feel at that time?
Ans. Abdul’s cousin Samsuddin distributed newspapers. The train would not stop at
Rameswaram because of the emergency declared due to second world war and the bundles of
newspapers were thrown from the running train. Abdul was employed by his cousin to collect
them. This way he earned his first wages. He felt very proud on earning his first wages.
Q.4 Had he earned any money before that? In what way?
Ans. During the time of Second World War, suddenly there was a great demand for tamarind
seeds. Abdul had earned money by selling tamarind seeds in the market during the starting
days of the Second World War.
Q.5 What characteristics did Abdul Kalam inherit from his parents?
Ans. Abdul Kalam inherited honesty and self-discipline from his father and faith in
goodness and kindness from his mother. Like his parents even he respected all religions.
Q.6 How does the author describe (i) his father, (ii) his mother, (iii) himself?
Ans. The author says that his fat her Jainulabdeen was a man of great innate wisdom and a
true generosity of spirit.
His mother Ashiamma was an ideal helpmate to his father and always fed the people who
came to their house
He himself was a short boy with rather simple looks. He has secure childhood materially and
emotionally.
Q.8 On the whole, the small society of Rameswaram was very rigid in terms of the
segregation of different social groups,” says the author.
(i) What social groups does he mention? Were these groups easily identifiable (for
example, in the way they dressed)?
Ans. The author mentions different social groups. These groups are of Hindus and Muslims
and Brahmins and Non-Brahmins. These groups were easily identifiable. A Muslim boy used
to wear a cap; A Hindu boy used to wear a sacred thread. A Hindu boy was recognised easily
by his hairstyle and the dress worn by him.
(ii) Were they aware only of their differences or did they also naturally share
friendships and experiences? (Think of the bedtime stories in Kalam’s house; of who his
friends were; and of what used to take place in the pond near his house)
Ans: They were not aware of their differences too much. They shared their friendships and
experiences. Abdul Kalam’s family was a Muslim family. But his mother and grandmother
told the events from the Ramayana and from the life of the prophet.
(iii) The author speaks both of people who were very aware of the differences among
them and those who tried to bridge these differences. Can you identify such people in
the text?
Ans: The incident when Kalam’s new teacher shifted him from the first row where he used
to sit with the Hindu priest’s son Ramanadha Sastry to the last row, helps to find out a person
who was intolerant to differences.
When the wife of Sivasubramania Iyer, Kalam’s science teacher refused to serve food to
Kalam, a Muslim boy in her ritually pure kitchen, helps to identify yet another person who
was intolerant to differences
The incident when Lakshmana Sastry, an orthodox Brahmin reprimanded the new teacher for
spreading the poison of social inequality among children, helps to identify a person who tried
to bridge the differences. Also when Sivasubramania Iyer an orthodox Brahman set an
example for his conservative wife by not only serving food to Kalam but also sitting beside
him to have his meal, helps to identify another person who try to bridge differences.
(iv) Narrate two incidents that show how differences can be created, and also how
they can be resolved. How can people change their attitudes?
Ans: The first incident took place when Abdul Kalam was in the fifth standard. He used to sit
in the front row with Ramanadha Sastry. A new teacher came to school. He could not
stomach a Muslim boy sitting with a Hindu boy. He asked Abdul Kalam to sit in the back
row.
The second incident took place when the wife of Abdul Kalam’s science teacher refused to
serve food to a Muslim boy in her kitchen. The new teacher and the wife of the science
teacher changed their attitude when they were dealt with respectively by the father of
Ramanadha Shastri and the science teacher. We can change this system if we decide to
change it.
Q.9 (i) Why did Abdul Kalam want to leave Rameswaram?
Ans. Abdul Kalam wanted to leave Rameswaram to study at the district headquarters in
Ramanathapuram for his higher studies.
(ii) What did his father say to this?
Ans: His father told him that he knew he had to go away to grow. He gave his permission
gladly.
Long Answer Type Questions:
Q1. What influence did Abdul Kalam’s teachers have on him?
Ans: Teachers play a very important role in the lives of their students. Abdul Kalam’s life too
was influenced in a major way by some experiences that he had during his school days. These
episodes were instrumental in shaping his character and later on his career.
When he was in the fifth standard a new teacher came to his class, a man with a conservative
and narrow outlook. He could not digest a Muslim boy sitting with a Brahmin boy that too
the son of a priest. in accordance with their social ranking as he saw it, he asked Kalam to go
and sit on the back bench. This was a heart-breaking experience for Kalam. The poison of
social inequality and communal intolerance could have demoralized the young Kalam if his
friend’s father Lakshmana Sastri had not intervened and ensured that the teacher not only
regretted his action but also reformed himself.
The other important influence in his life was Sivasubramania Iyer, his science teacher. He
wanted Kalam to be highly educated as he recognised his intelligence. He used to spend
hours with the young boy and would express his desire that Kalam should develop his
abilities so that he was on par with the highly educated people of the big cities. He also
wanted to break the social barriers. He invited him for meals at his house but saw that his
wife was not ready to serve Kalam. Later, he invited him over again for another meal the
coming weekend. He advised Kalam, “Once you decide to change the system such problems
have to be confronted.” These two experiences shaped Kalam’s outlook as they made him
realise the importance of confronting problems and fighting divisive forces
Q.2 “Once you decide to change the system, such problems have to be confronted.”
What ‘system’ is this sentence referring to? What are `such problems’? Does the text
suggest that the problems have been tackled?
Ans: System means system of discrimination on the basis of religion. The system includes the
narrow-mindedness and poison of social inequality and communal intolerance. At that time
the small society of the town of Rameswaram was rigid in terms of the segregation of
different social groups. This system was prevalent in the whole of the country. The high caste
people did not like to eat or drink with the people of low caste. The new teacher in Abdul
Kalam’s class could not tolerate that a Muslim boy should sit with the son of a Hindu priest.
He said to Abdul Kalam to come to the back bench. But some people have tried to fight these
problems. Abdul Kalam’s science teacher Shiva Subramanian Iyer served Abdul Kalam with
his own hands. He sat down with him to eat. Later his wife realised her mistake, the next
week she served Abdul Kalam in her kitchen. Yet these problems are deep rooted in India.
These have not been tackled even now.
Q.3 Why did Abdul Kalam father say “Does the Seagull not fly across the sun, alone
and without a nest?”
Ans: When Abdul Kalam asked his father for permission to leave Rameswaram and study at
the district headquarters in Ramanathapuram. His father did not get upset nor did he try to
stop him. On the contrary he encouraged his son to leave Rameswaram and to spread his
wings and go to make his own way. Unlike human beings most of the animals teach their
young ones the skills of survival and allow them to fend themselves. This makes them more
independent and courageous. For humans also after a certain age certain degree of
responsibility and independence is always helpful in making a perfect adult. His father
realised his son wanted to go away to grow. He was a wise man and was aware of the need of
an individual to grow and achieve his full potential. He knew that Life is not easy. His son
would have to make tremendous efforts to face the hardships of life.
Writing Skills -Story Writing
A story writing is work of “fiction or imagination” that is usually written in “easily
understandable grammatical structure” with “natural flow of speech”. Story writing is meant
to be read at single sitting and therefore it should be as direct and brief as possible.
The main purpose of structuring a story is to explain, narrate, and persuade the reader or an
audience
Elements of the Story Writing:
*SETTING OF THE STORY:
* The Setting describes where and when the story takes place.
* It helps to build a background and creates images in the mind.
* CHARACTERS:
* Every story needs characters – people, animals or creatures.
* Introduce less but impactful characters.
* Include direct dialogues of the characters.
*PLOT:
* The plot actually means your whole story. So, make sure your plot is well developed
and based on your title.
* CONFLICT:
* Often the conflict in the story can be an event, situation or even a new character.
* Conflict is where you have the chance to experiment with your characters by putting
them in a persevering circumstance
*DIRECT DIALOGUES:
* Dialogues of the characters should be added in the story.
Tips that will help you to compose an extraordinary story.
• Compose a story with fewer characters.
• Try to establish your narrative in a shorter time frame.
• Describe the setting vividly.
• Curate the beginning with a compelling first line.
• Mould your characters with certain traits and skills to help the reader remember them.
• Choose a suitable title that fits your narrative.
• Use a simpler and understandable language.
• Do not forget to add some direct dialogues.
• Write short sentences and maintain word limit.
• Maintain coherence in your writing.
• Try to impart the readers with a particular moral or message in the end.
Sample Questions:
• Complete the story with the following beginning in about 150-200 words,
providing an appropriate title to it.
Yesterday I went to the beach with my friends. We were quite happy…
A Strange Man
• Yesterday I went to the beach with my friends. We were quite happy. We arrived at
the beach at around 10:30 am. We selected a spot by the sea and placed our packets on the
benches. After reaching the beach, we decided to play some games on the sand.
• As we had brought two footballs and there were six children, we started jumping and
exchanging with one another. During our play, the ball slipped away near the date tree and I
hurried towards the tree to bring back the ball. Fortunately, I watched a strange man near the
beach. He was a very tall man and wearing a long coat and hat. A big knife was fitted into his
strong belt. As he had a different look and dress, I took interest in watching him. I went near
the man who was calling someone and a hawk was flying near his leg. The strange man was
lame in his left leg but he was filled with courage and excitement. I thought him to be a
seaman and desired to meet him. Fortunately, his eyes caught my presence and he said,
“What do you want? Why have you come here?”
• I gathered courage and went to him. The man was pleased with me. I asked him,
“What is your name?” He politely answered, “My name is John.” During our gossip I came to
know that he was a sailor by profession. He had brought up the hawk since he was of five
years. He belonged to France and his father was also a sailor.
• In the meantime, my friends arrived at the spot. They were also surprised at the sailor.
Although he was lame, he often liked to visit the new places. Now he is in our city and would
stay for two more days. Really he was bold and courageous sailor.
Moral: A man cannot be judged by his appearance.
2. Write a story in about 150-200 words on the basis of the given outlines:
• The illiterate boy……… caught for pick pocketing……. sent to juvenile
prison………forced to do lessons………becomes sullen rebellious watches
French comic film on T.V. during recreation hour fascinated with the
language………. requested coaching classes… a French tourist guide today.
Man—The Master of his own Destiny
Raju was a little boy who was born in a poor family. He wanted to get education but his
financial condition did not allow him to do so. He remained illiterate and so did not have any
means of earning. He took to pickpocketing and small thievery.
One day, he was caught red-handed for pick-pocketing. Since he was only thirteen, he was
sent to juvenile prison where he was forced to do lessons. He had no interest in them and the
compelling behaviour of the prison-people made him sullen and rebellious. It was only during
the recreation hour that he seemed to be his normal self. One day he watched a French comic
film on T.V.
He was fascinated with the French language and wanted to learn it. He requested the prison
authorities for coaching classes in French. They agreed to his proposal as they were
themselves interested to make him learn something so as to be self-dependent. Raju showed a
keen interest in learning the language and in a very short period, had acquired a mastery over
the language. Raju was set free after two years. He had already decided to use the French
language as his means of earning. He became a French tourist guide and started leading an
honourable life. He forgot all about his past and is happy these days for the sudden but
positive turn in his life. He has set an example for others that man is a master of his own
destiny.
Practice Questions:
1. It was raining heavily, the street lights had gone off and I was
returning…
Complete the story in about 150-200 words, providing an
appropriate title to it.
2. Write an original story in about 150-200 words taking help from the visual given
below:
As I opened the window I saw………………………
Note: Only practice questions to be written in the Grammar notebook.
Class-IX
Subject Verb Agreement
Subjects and verbs must agree with each other in number for a sentence to make sense.
THE TWENTY RULES OF SUBJECT VERB AGREEMENT
1. Subjects and verbs must agree in number. When subject is singular, the verb will also
be singular.
The dog growls when he is angry.
The dogs growl when they are angry.
2. Subordinate clauses that come between the subject and verb don't affect their
agreement.
The dog, who is chewing on my jeans, is usually very good.
3. Prepositional phrases between the subject and verb usually do not affect agreement.
The colours of the rainbow are beautiful.
4. When sentences start with "there" or "here," the subject will always be placed after
the verb. Some care needs to be taken to identify each part correctly.
There is a problem with the balance sheet.
Here are the papers you requested.
5. Subjects don't always come before verbs in questions. Make sure you accurately
identify the subject before deciding on the proper verb form to use.
Where are the pieces of this puzzle?
6. If two subjects are joined by "and," they typically require a plural verb form.
The cow and the pig are jumping over the moon.
7. The verb is singular if the two subjects separated by "and" refer to the same person
or thing as a whole.
Red beans and rice is my mom's favorite dish.
The owner and CEO of Nike has been arrested.
8. If one of the words "each," "every," or "no" comes before the subject, the verb is
singular.
No smoking or drinking is allowed.
Every man and woman is required to check in.
9. If the subjects are both singular and are connected by the words "or," "nor,"
"neither/nor," "either/or," or "not only/but also," the verb is singular.
Either Jessica or Christian is to blame for the accident.
10. The only time the object of the preposition decides plural or singular verb forms is
when noun and pronoun subjects like "some," "half," "none," "more," or "all" are
followed by a prepositional phrase. Then the object of the preposition determines the
form of the verb.
All of the chicken is gone.
All of the chickens are gone.
11. The singular verb form is usually reserved for units of measurement or time.
Four quarts of oil was required to get the car running.
12. If the subjects are both plural and are connected by the words "or," "nor,"
"neither/nor," "either/or," or "not only/but also," the verb is plural.
Not only dogs but also cats are available at the animal shelter.
13. If one subject is singular and the other is plural, and the words are connected by the
words "or," "nor," "neither/nor," "either/or," or "not only/but also," use the verb
form of the subject that is nearest the verb.
Either the bears or the lion has escaped from the zoo.
Neither the lion nor the bears have escaped from the zoo.
14. Indefinite pronouns typically take singular verbs (with some exceptions).
Everybody wants to be loved.
Nobody likes to be alone.
Somebody is waiting for you.
15. The exceptions to the above rule include the pronouns "few," "many," "several,"
"both," "all," and "some." These always take the plural form.
Few were left alive after the flood.
16. If two infinitives are separated by "and," they take the plural form of the verb.
To walk and to chew gum require great skill.
17. When gerunds are used as the subject of a sentence, they take the singular form of
the verb. However, when they are linked by "and," they take the plural form.
Standing in the water was a bad idea.
Swimming in the ocean and playing drums are my hobbies.
18. A collective noun, such as "team" or "staff," can be either singular or plural
depending upon the rest of the sentence. Typically, they take the singular form, as the
collective noun is treated as a cohesive single unit.
The herd is stampeding.
19. Titles of books, movies, novels, and other similar works are treated as singular and
take a singular verb.
The Burbs is a movie starring Tom Hanks.
20. Final rule: Remember, only the subject affects the verb! Nothing else matters.
Jacob, who owns sixteen houses, is on his way to becoming a billionaire.
Exercises:
Q. Choose the correct form of the verbs given in the brackets in the following sentences:
1. Each of these producers .................................... his own advantage. (has, have)
2. Ten miles… ................................ long distance, (is, are)
3. Many of the students ................................. hard to pass their entrance exam. (try, tries)
4. The furniture in his house .............................. impressive. (look, looks)
5. Few students… .......................present in the class today. (is, are)
6. Ritesh, my best friend… ............................ leaving for Japan next week. (is, are)
7. One of my friends… ......................... a government employee. (is, are)
8. The level of intoxication… ............................ from subject to subject. (vary, varies)
9. Either boys or girls… ................. telling lies. (is, are)
10. A number of people .................................... reported to be missing in the train accident
at Jhansi. (was, were)
Q. Supply a verb in the blanks in agreement with its subject.
(a) No news .................................. good news.
(b) The girl and the boy .................................. disappeared.
(c) One-third of the town .................................. flooded.
(d) “The Three Idiots” .................................. directed by Raju Hirani.
(e) Bhagwan Das, the writer, and the poet, .................................. passed away.
(f) Saffron, white and green .................................. the colours of the Indian flag.
(g) Chicken and cheese .................................. my favourite breakfast.
(h) The crew .................................. forced to get off the plane.
(i) The ship, with its crew, .................................. not traceable.
(j) Nobody agreed. There .................................. many objections to the proposal.
Answer:
(a) is
(b) have/had
(c) was
(d) is
(e) has
(f) are
(g) is
(h) was
(i) was
(j) were
Q. Choose the most appropriate option:
1. The government will the order soon.
A. passed
B. passes
C. pass
D. has passed
2. The poor _ suffered a lot due to the pandemic.
A. have
B. are
C. is
D. has
3. The teacher and the students arrived.
A. has
B. have
C. will
D. are
4. The event earlier than the schedule.
A. begin
B. begins
C. began
D. begun
5. Many people registered for the course.
A. have
B. has
C. having
D. is
6. Two-third of the pantry full.
A. are
B. were
C. have
D. is
7. The timing _ inappropriate.
A. were
B. was
C. has
D. have been
8. The package to be carried carefully.
A. is
B. are
C. have
D. were
9. Joshua, with his members, really well.
A. sing
B. singing
C. have sung
D. sings
10. We should definitely that lake.
A. visit
B. visits
C. visiting
D. visited
Beehive- Unit 5 : A Legend of the Northland (Poem)
Word Meanings:
Legend(noun) – old traditional story
Provoke(verb) – make angry
Dwell(verb) – live
Harness(verb) – to strap or fasten
Hearth(noun) – fire place
INTRODUCTION
A Legend of the Northland” is a traditional, popular story composed in the style of a ballad. It
narrates the legend of how St. Peter had once cursed an old lady for being mean and stingy.
The poem, thus, imparts the important lesson that greed always gets punished.
THEME
The poem is based on the theme that greed is a grave sin. Greedy people do not deserve the
blessings and the comforts of human life. Human beings should thus acquire qualities of
kindness, fellow-feeling and empathy. The little woman’s greed stopped her from sharing
even her smallest cake with hungry Saint Peter, thus earning his wrath.
MESSAGE
The poem conveys the message that as human beings, we should have positive qualities like
love, fellow-feeling, sympathy, and a sense of sharing. The poet also brings forth the idea that
people with negative, inhuman values like selfishness, greed and cruelty are ultimately
punished.
LITERARY DEVICES IN THE POEM
(Not to be written in notebook, mark in book)
• Rhyme Scheme: abcb
1. Alliteration: It is the repetition of a consonant sound in two or more close words.
Stanza 1 –
• That they cannot sleep them through that, they, them - ‘th’ sound is repeated
Stanza 2 –
• Where they harness the swift reindeer they, the - ‘th’ sound is repeated
• And the children look like bear cubs look, like - ‘l’ sound is repeated
• In their funny, furry clothes: funny, furry - ‘f’ sound is repeated
Stanza 3 –
• They tell them a curious story they, them- ‘th’ sound is repeated
• And yet you may learn a lesson yet, you - ‘y’ sound is repeated learn, lesson -
‘l’ sound is repeated
• If I tell the tale to you.
tell, tale, to - ‘t’ sound is repeated
Stanza 5 –
• Where a little woman was making cakes woman, was – ‘w’ sound is repeated
• And baking them on the hearth Them, the, - ‘th’ sound is repeated
Stanza 6 –
• And being faint with fasting
faint, fasting - ‘f’ sound is repeating
Stanza 8 –
• And still a smaller one
still, smaller - ‘s’ sound is repeating
Stanza 9 –
• Then she took a tiny scrap of dough took, tiny -‘t’ sound is repeated
Stanza 10 –
• My cakes that seem too small seem, small - ‘s’ sound is repeated
Stanza 13 –
• Now, you shall build as the birds do build, birds - ‘b’ sound is repeated
2. Repetition: any word or sentence is repeated to lay emphasis on it.
Stanza 1 –
• Away, away in the Northland ‘away’ word is repeated
Stanza 9 –
• And rolled and rolled it flat ‘rolled’ word is repeated
Stanza 13–
• By boring and boring and boring ‘boring’ word is repeated
Stanza 16–
• Boring and boring for food ‘boring’ word is repeated
3. Enjambment: running lines of poetry from one to the next without using any kind of
punctuation to indicate a stop
Stanza 1 - line 3 and 4
Stanza 2 - Line 1 and 2; line 3 and 4
Stanza 3 - Line 3 and 4
Stanza 4 - Line 1 and 2
Stanza 10 - Line 1, 2 and 3
4. Simile: Comparison using ‘as’ or ‘like’
Stanza 2 – ‘the children look like bear’s cubs’. Children are compared to bear’s cubs Stanza 9
– ‘baked it thin as a wafer’. Cake is compared to a wafer.
Stanza 15 – ‘clothes were burned black as a coal’. The colour of the burned clothes is
compared to that of coal.
5. Personification: Giving human quality to ideas, animals etc. Stanza 16 – ‘Where she
lives in the trees’.
Answer the following questions:
Q.1 Write the story of ‘A Legend of the Northland’ in few sentences.
Ans. Once Saint Peter stopped by an old lady’s cottage because he was feeling hungry and
weak after constant fasting. The lady was baking cakes on the hearth. Since he was weak on
fasting, he asked her for a cake from her store of cakes.
The selfish lady tried to bake small cakes but each time they seemed too big for her to give
away. Finally, she baked one that was as thin as a wafer. Unable to part with it too, she put it
on a shelf and did not give any cake to the Saint.
Saint Peter was very angry with her behaviour and said she was too selfish to live as a human
and have food, shelter and fire to keep her warm. He punished her by changing her into a
woodpecker that would have to build a nest to live in, bore for food in the trunks of trees. Her
clothes were burned and she was left with her scarlet cap on her head as she flew out through
the chimney.
Even today she lives in the woods and is seen by all the country school boys.
Q.2 What is a legend? Why is this poem called a legend?
Ans. A ‘legend’ is a popular story from the past which is believed by many but one cannot
prove whether it is true or not. It usually contains a message or a moral and is narrated to
children.
The poet himself says that he doesn’t believe this tale to be true. This poem is called a
‘legend’ because it preaches generosity towards fellow beings.
Q.3 Is this a true story? Which part of this poem do you feel is the most important?
Ans. No, this is not a true story; it is a legend.
I feel that the point in the story where the old lady is changed into a woodpecker is the most
important. This is because the punishment given to the lady teaches us the value of generosity
and charity.
Q4 What did Saint Peter ask the lady for? What was the lady’s reaction?
Ans. Saint Peter asked the old lady for just a single cake from the store of cakes that she was
making but the lady reacted in an inhuman way. She refused to part with her cakes, not even
the one that was as thin as a wafer.
Q5 How did Saint Peter punish her?
Ans. Angered by the woman’s selfishness, Saint Peter lost his patience and reacted by
cursing and punishing her. He announced that she would no longer enjoy the comforts and
blessings of human life. Ample food, secure shelter and the warmth of fire will no longer be
available to her. She would become a woodpecker and would have to drill the hard wood all
day for food.
Q6 Do you think that the lady would have been so ungenerous if she had known who
Saint Peter really was? What would she have done then?
Ans The lady would not have been so ungenerous if she had known who Saint Peter really
was. Had she known that the man asking for just a single cake was a divine saint endowed
with heavenly powers, she would have generously given away not one but many cakes. She
would have sought his blessings by providing him not only food but also shelter.
Q7 How does the woodpecker get her food?
Ans Deprived of the plenty of food that she could find easily in her human form, the
woman- turned- woodpecker has to labour hard all day long to get her meagre food by
continuously drilling the hard trunks of trees with her beak.
Long Answer Questions:
1. True satisfaction is spoiled by greed. Discuss it in the context of the poem.
Ans True satisfaction lies in sharing things with others. Peace and satisfaction are the two
sides of a coin. If there is satisfaction in our life, peace is bound to come. However, greed
spoils both. If we are greedy, we cannot get satisfaction or peace in our life. In the poem, the
old lady was greedy and she failed to give even the smallest piece of cake to the saint due to
which she was turned into a woodpecker who had to bore in the dry wood to get food for
herself. If she had satisfaction, she would certainly have shown honour and regard to the
saint. So, in the case of this little lady, it can be said that her greed had spoiled her peace and
satisfaction. Actually, the saints try to create such societies in which all the people should be
treated with equality and greed would have no place in them. With the help of their own
techniques, they desire to bring down heaven on the earth.
2. Why was the little woman cursed particularly to be a woodpecker and not
another bird? How did she struggle to get her scanty food?
Ans The little woman aroused the anger of a holy man. The saint spent most of his time in
travelling and preaching. Constant fasting had made him hungry and weak. Saint Peter asked
for a piece of cake when he saw a little woman baking cakes. The greedy
woman could have easily given a piece of cake to the saint. But the selfish woman thought
that even a very little piece was too large to be given to him. She denied even this little
offering. So, the saint cursed her to be a woodpecker who had to labour hard by boring into
the tree for a long time to get even her scanty food. Thus, she had to struggle hard because
she made the saint wait for a long time for the piece of cake and gave nothing.
(BEEHIVE) Chapter 4: A Truly Beautiful Mind
Word meanings:
Amateur (adj.) – doing something for personal enjoyment Regimentation (noun) – order or discipline taken to an extreme
Stifled (verb) – unable to breathe
Ally (noun) – a friend or an associate
Patent (noun) – a document which gives the rights of an invention to an inventor
Answer the following questions:
Q.1 Explain what the reasons for the following are.
(i) Einstein leaving the school in Munich for good.
(ii) Einstein wanting to study in Switzerland rather than in Munich.
(iii) Einstein seeing in Mileva an ally.
(iv) What do these tell you about Einstein?
Ans. (i) Einstein left the school in Munich for good because he hated the school’s regimentation.
(ii) Einstein wanted to study in Switzerland rather than in Munich because it was a more liberal city.
(iii) Einstein found in Mileva an ally because she, like him, disapproved the “philistines” or the people who did not like art, literature or music.
(iv) These tell about Einstein that he loved freedom. He was a liberal and cultured person.
Q.2 What did Einstein call his desk drawer at the patent office? Why?
Ans. Einstein jokingly called his desk drawer at the patent office as “Bureau of
theoretical physics”. He did so because his office job required him to assess the inventions of other people while he secretly developed his own ideas regarding his keen interest in Physics.
Q.3 Why did the people call Einstein a world citizen?
Ans. People called Einstein a world citizen because he campaigned for peace and
democracy and was agitated against arms and bombs especially after the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Q.4 Why did Einstein write a letter to the American President Roosevelt?
Ans. Einstein wrote a letter to Franklin Roosevelt when the Nazis were in Germany and he
had to migrate from there. The discovery of Nuclear fission in Germany made the American physicists upset that the Nazis could use an atom bomb.
Q.5 How did Einstein react to the bombing of the Japanese cities Hiroshima and
Nagasaki by America?
Ans. Einstein was completely shaken by the immense destruction caused due to the
bombing of the Japanese cities Hiroshima and Nagasaki by America. As a reaction to this tragic event, he wrote a letter to the United Nations proposing the establishment of a world government that could counter such fierce enmity among nations.
Practice questions:
Q.1 Einstein was an unusual child with no indication of his potential greatness.
Comment.
Q.2 Which values does the life of Einstein teach you?
BEEHIVE - Rain on the Roof (Poem)
Coates Kinney
Word meanings
Tinkle (noun) - short, light ringing sounds
Shingles (noun) - rectangular wooden tiles used on roofs
Woof (noun) - the threads woven across the loom
Hover (verb)- float
Melancholy- sad
INTRODUCTION
This lyrical poem “Rain on the Roof” by Coates Kinney presents the memories aroused
in the poet’s mind by the showers falling on the tin roof. Through a number of
metaphors, the poet shows that the drops of rain falling on the shingles of the roof sends
a train of thoughts running in his mind. He is reminded of the way his mother used to
bid him and his siblings a good night and put them to sleep. The poet connects his present
with his past through the memories revived by the rain.
THEME
The theme of the poem is the healing power of rain. The musical sound of raindrops
falling on the rooftop at night has the ability to revive sweet memories and rouse fan-
cies in an otherwise busy mind. The rain thus soothes and comforts an overworked mind
by taking it back to its lovely past. Some of our best memories in life are associ- ated
with rain.
MESSAGE
The poem Rain on the Roof conveys the message that rain is Mother Nature’s way of
showing her healing and therapeutic properties. It leaves everlasting memories in the
minds of humans with its presence, fragrance and sound apart from the experiences of
humans with it. The rain rejuvenates and refreshes the human mind by helping it to
revive and recollect pleasant memories of the past.
LITERARY DEVICES
Rhyme scheme of the poem: abcbdefe
Stanza 1
1. Alliteration: The repetition of a consonant sound in two or more consecutive
words.
‘Humid Hover’ - ‘h’ sound is repeating.
‘starry spheres’ - ‘s’ should is repeating.
‘press pillow’ - ‘p’ sound is repeating.
‘lie listening’ - ‘l’ sound is repeating.
2. Onomatopoeia: The use of sound words to create a dramatic effect and auditory
imagery.
‘Patter’ is the use of sound word. It is the sound made by the rain drops falling
on the roof top.
3. Personification: Treating a non – living thing as a living being.
‘darkness’ has been personified when the poet says that it is sad.
Stanza 2
1. Alliteration: The repetition of a consonant sound in two or more consecutive
words.
‘busy being’ - ‘b’ sound is repeating
‘rain roof’ - ‘r’ sound is repeating
2. Onomatopoeia: The use of sound words to create a dramatic effect and auditory
imagery.
‘tinkle’, ‘patter’ – sounds made by the raindrops
3. Personification: Treating a non – living thing as a living being.
‘recollection’ is personified when the poet says that they weave dreams.
Stanza 3
1. Alliteration: The repetition of a consonant sound in two or more consecutive
words.
‘memory my mother’ - ‘m’ sound is repeating
‘Darling dreamers’ - ‘d’ sound is repeating
2. Onomatopoeia: The use of sound words to create a dramatic effect and audi-
tory imagery.
‘patter’ – sound of raindrops falling on the shingles of the roof.
Answer the following questions:
Q.1 What do the following phrases mean to you?
(i) humid shadows
(ii) starry spheres
(iii) what a bliss
(iv) a thousand dreamy fancies into busy being start
(v) a thousand recollections weave their air-threads into woof
Ans. (i) “Humid shadows” refer to the dark clouds that produce rain.
(ii) “Starry spheres” refer to the night sky abounding in stars. (iii) “What a bliss” refers to the happiness of the poet. When it rains the poet gets into his cottage and enjoys the patter of the rain upon the roof. (iv) This refers to the various imaginary thoughts and fancies that are aroused in the poet’s mind.
(v) This phrase means that numerous memories intermingle to form a beautiful pic- ture that the poet recollects.
Q.2 What does the poet like to do when it rains?
Ans. When it rains, the poet feels delighted to lie with his head pressed against the pillow
of his cottage chamber bed and listen to the patter of the soft rain.
Q.3 What is the single major memory that comes to the poet? Who are the “darling
dreamers” referred to by the poet?
Ans. The single major memory that comes distinctly to the poet is of his mother. The rain
revives his thoughts of the time when his mother used to look lovingly at
him and his siblings before she went to sleep in her bedchamber.
The darling dreamers are the poet and his siblings. They were very dear to
their moth- er and they are called ‘dreamers’ because they would often
have sweet dreams in their sleep. Their mother must have always wished
them “sweet dreams” before retiring to her room.
Q.4 Is the poet now a child? Is his mother still alive?
Ans. The poet is no longer a child. He has grown up and his mother is no more
alive. He thinks of his mother and his childhood with a feeling of nostalgia
which makes it clear that his mother is no more.
Q.5 Does everybody have a cosy bed to lie in when it rains? Look
around you and describe how different kinds of people or animals
spend time, seek shelter etc. during rain.
Ans. No, everybody is not fortunate enough to have a cosy bed to lie in when it rains. Not everybody gets to enjoy the comfort of cosy homes during rain. I have seen animals
seeking shelter under trees and under the tin roofs of the small roadside
tea stalls. The people passing by, shoo away these animals and try to shrink
themselves under the limited space of these shops. The poor animals are
left shivering and drenching on the roads. The shopkeepers of such stalls
are delighted as the people waiting for the rain to subside often end up
buying tea and snacks.
Practice Question:
Q.1 What happens when the poet listens to the patter of the rain? Do
you think that rain is a narrative tool in the poet’s life?
Class IX Study Material
REPORTED SPEECH
(Only exercises to be done in the Grammar notebook)
* Direct and Indirect Speech:
The words spoken by a person can be reported in two ways—Direct and Indirect.
When we quote the exact words spoken by a person, we call it Direct Speech.
Sohan said to Mohan, “I am going to school.”
The exact words spoken by Sohan are put within inverted commas. But when we give the substance of what Sohan said, it is called the Indirect Speech.
Soham told Mohan that he was going to school.
* Rules for Changing Direct Speech into Indirect Speech:
In the Indirect speech, no inverted commas are used.
The conjunctions that, if, whether, are generally used after the reporting verb.
The tense of the reporting verb is never changed.
The reporting verb changes according to sense: it may be told, asked, inquired,etc.
* Rules for the change of Pronouns:
The first person pronouns (I, me, my, we, us, our) in the reported speech change
according to the subject of the reporting verb.
The pronouns of the second person (you, your, yourself) in the reported speech change
according to the object of the reporting verb.
The pronouns of the third person do not change.
* Changes in words expressing nearness, time, auxiliaries, etc.
this changes into that
these changes into those
now changes into then
here changes into there
today changes into that day
tomorrow changes into the next day
yesterday changes into the previous day
last night changes into the previous night
can changes into could
may changes into might
shall changes into should
will changes into would
ago changes into before
just changes into then
come changes into go
thus changes into so
* Change in Tenses:
Direct speech Indirect/Reported speech
Simple present Simple past
Present continuous Past continuous
Simple past Past perfect
Past continuous Past perfect continuous
Present perfect tense Past perfect tense
Past perfect tense Past perfect tense
* Changing Statements into Indirect Speech:
The reporting verb “said to’ is changed to ‘told, ‘replied’, ‘‘remarked’,
The inverted commas are removed. The conjunction ‘that’ is used to connect the
reporting clause with the reported speech.
The rules for the change of pronouns, tenses, etc. are followed.
Direct : Ramu said, “I saw a lion in the forest.”
Indirect : Ramu said that he had seen a lion in the forest.
* Changing of Interrogative (Questions) sentences:
The reporting verb ‘said’ is changed into asked, inquired,
The interrogative sentence is changed into a statement by placing the subject before the
verb and the full stop is put at the end of the sentence.
Direct : I said to him, “Where are you going?”
Indirect: I asked him where he was going.
* If the interrogative sentence is a yes-no answer type sentence (with auxiliary verbs is, are,
was, were, do, did, has, have, shall, etc), then if or ‘whether’ is used as a conjunction.
Direct : I said to him, “Are you happy?”
Indirect: I asked him if he was happy.
* Changing Commands and Requests into Indirect Speech:
In imperative sentences having commands, the reporting verb is changed
into command, order, tell, allow, request ,etc.
The imperative mood is changed into the infinitive mood by putting to, before the verb.
In case of negative sentences, the auxiliary ‘do’ is dropped and ‘to’ is placed after ‘not:
Direct : She said to me, “Open the window.”
Indirect : She ordered me to open the window.
Direct : I said to him, “Please do not make a noise?”
Indirect : I requested him not to make a noise.
Changing Exclamations and Wishes into indirect speech:
Sometimes Exclamatory sentences contain exclamations like Hurrah!, Alas!, Oh!, Heavens!,
Bravo, etc. Such exclamatory words are removed in the indirect speech and we use
‘exclaimed with sorrow’, exclaimed with joy, exclaimed with surprise, etc. instead of ‘said’.
Examples:
Direct : Rohan said, “Hurrah! We won the match.”
Indirect: Rohan exclaimed with joy that they had won the match.
Direct : Reema said, “Alas! Karina’s mother is suffering from cancer.”
Indirect: Reema exclaimed with sorrow that Karina’s mother was suffering from
cancer.
* Sentences with ‘Let’:
* Changing of ‘have to’ or ‘had to’ 1. Direct: Hari said, “ I have to work a lot.”
Indirect: Hari said that he had to work a lot.
2. Direct: He said, “ I like the book.”
Indirect: He said that he liked the book.
3. Direct: He said to me, “Do you like the book?”
Indirect: He asked me if I liked the book.
b) used as ‘to allow’
Direct: Ram said to Mohan, “Let him do it”
Indirect: Ram suggested Mohan to let him
do that.
* Let is used in various meanings: a) to make a ‘proposal.’ o
Direct: He said to me, “ Let us go home”
Indirect: He suggested me that we should
go home.
Exercises:
1. Read the dialogues given below and complete the paragraph.
Soumya: Where have you been all these days?
Kirthi: I went to Pune to attend a seminar on environmental pollution.
Soumya: How was the seminar?
Kirthi: It was quite informative and worth attending.
Soumya asked Kirthi where she had been all those days. Kirthi replied that she had gone to
Pune to attend a seminar on environmental pollution. Soumya wanted to know how the
seminar was. Kirthi told her that it had been quite informative and worth attending.
2. Shilpa: Can I borrow your English textbook?
Jaya: Sure you can. But when will you return it?
Shilpa: I will return it to you after two days from today.
Jaya: Please do as I have to prepare for the exams.
Shilpa asked Jaya (a) . Jaya replied that (b) and asked her (c) . Shilpa said she (d) . Jaya urged her
(e) since she (f) .
Ans: Shilpa asked Jaya (a) if she could borrow her English textbook. Jaya replied that
(b) she could and asked her (c) when she would return it. Shilpa said she (d) would return
it to her after two days from that day. Jaya urged her (e) to do that since she (f) had to
prepare for the exams.
3. Complete the Paragraph given below the dialogues by choosing the correct answers
from the options given below:
Anoop: Where can we meet tomorrow?
Atul: I may not be able to meet you tomorrow.
Anoop: Are you going to be busy?
Atul: Yes, I will be travelling tomorrow.
Anoop asked Atul (a) Atul replied that (b) Anoop
again asked (c) Atul replied in affirmative that (d) .
a) i) where could we meet tomorrow. ii) where they could meet the next day.
iii) where can they meet tomorrow. iv) where did they meet the previous day.
b) i) he might not be able to meet him the next day.
ii) he may not be able to meet him the next day.
iii) he might not be able to meet you tomorrow.
iv) I might not be able to meet you the next day.
c) i) that was he going to be busy. ii) if he was going to be busy.
iii) whether you are going to be busy. iv) was he going to be busy.
d) i) he would be travelling tomorrow ii) he would be travelling the next day.
iv) he will be travelling the previous day. iv) he would be travelling that day.
4. Bhavesh: Your shirt is very fine. Please tell me from where did you buy it.
Kavish: I bought it from a
showroom. Bhavesh: Will you tell
how much it cost you? Kavish: It
cost me nine hundred rupees.
Bhavesh told Kavish that (a) and asked where did he buy that
from. Kavish replied that (b) .Further Bhavesh asked him (c)
. At this Kavish replied that (d) .
5. Servant : Please give me leave for a
week.
Master : Why do you need such a
long leave?
Servant : I have to visit my village.
Master : O.K. but don’t extend your leave.
The Servant requested his master (a) for a week. The master asked him
why
(b) such a long leave. At this, the servant said that (c) .
The master acceded to his request but asked him (d) leave.
Letter Writing
• Letter is a mode of communication and a store of information.
• It is used to express and convey one’s thoughts to someone in particular or masses.
• It can be more expressive and emotional and one can preserve for posterity.
Types of letters: Formal Letters and Informal Letters.
INFORMAL LETTERS
Features of Informal Letter:
• Is written to friends, relatives, parents etc. for personal communication.
• Requires a casual or an emotional tone.
• Is lengthier than a formal letter.
• Should have an easy and conversational language.
• Is addressed with a personal touch in casual, friendly language.
• Sincere feelings are expressed with sincerity.
• Is written to thank, congratulate, condole, cheer up, apologise, invite, seeking favours etc.
Format
Sender’s Address Sender’s address is preferred on the top left hand corner.
Date
The date is preferred below the sender’s address and it should be alpha numeric.
Salutation
We must write ‘Dear’ as greeting. Some of the common greetings are :
Dear (first name, relation) The Body / content
The body of the informal letter includes:
Your reason for writing the letter.
Explanation and details of the concerning topic.
Concluding remarks.
Invite the person to write back Best Wishes
C- 47 Rohini, New Delhi (Sender’s Address) 30 JUNE 2021 (Date) Dear ………. (Salutation) Your reason for writing the letter. Explanation and details of the concerning topic (Body of the letter) Concluding remarks Invite the person to write back Give my regards to... I hope to hear from you soon. (Complimentary closure) Yours lovingly / Your loving………….. ( Subscription) ABC
Sample Question 1 :
You are Manav / Manavi, write a letter to your grandfather asking him to come and stay with you
during vacations, in about 100-120 words.
ABC Apartments
Lodhi Road, New Delhi
30 June 2021
Dear Grandpa
It has been a while since I have heard from you. How have you been? I hope this letter finds you in the
best of your health and cheerful spirits.
Summers are approaching and so are vacations, Daadu. We were thinking if you can plan to come and
stay with us during holidays. It has been a long time since we have stayed together. I and everyone at
home are missing you and grandma a lot. If you can come and stay with us, it will be of great
excitement to all of us. We will relive our childhood days.
We cherish those moments when you used to tell us stories before going to bed and Grandma cooked
delicious desserts which cannot be compared to anything in the world. We will take care of your
schedule and medicines. There are many parks where you can continue your morning and evening
walks.
We all are looking forward to your reply. Hope to see you soon.
Yours lovingly
Manav
Sample Question 2:
Your friend has not fared well in the recent examinations. Write a letter to him/her expressing
your concern. Give him/her some advice on how to score better marks and offer to help him/her
to improve his/her performance, in 100-120 words.
Hopetown Girls’ School
Rajawala Road, Dehradun
30 June 2021
Dear Sheelu,
It was a great joy to hear from you. I hope this letter finds you in the best of health.
Please do forgive me. I heard that you could not score your best in the recent examination due to
the mishappening at your place. It is completely alright and you need not lose hope. There is always
a scope for improvement. You are definitely a very talented and bright student and with a little
focus, concentration and help, you will be able to fare well in your upcoming examinations with
flying colours.
If you cannot stay up late at night, no need to worry as you can get up early in the mornings instead.
Early morning is the best time to study. Every day you wake up with a fresh mind which will help you
to easily gain all the knowledge you need.
I also suggest you to revise the concept and practice Mathematics regularly. However, if you face
difficulty in understanding any concept or topic feel free to write to me. I shall be more than happy
to help you.
All the very best for the upcoming examinations. I know you will make us all proud.
Your true friend
Geetika
Practice Questions:
1. You are Arpan / Archana living in Delhi. You are an active member of the eco club of your school.
Your club has given you the responsibility of developing a park in your neighbourhood with the help
of volunteers. Write a letter to your friend narrating this and urge him / her to do the same in his /
her neighbourhood, in 100-120 words.
2. You are Ritika / Rahul Write a letter to your father informing him about the hobby classes you
have joined recently, in 100-120 words.
RECAPITULATION OF TENSES
Present Tense
TENSE SIMPLE CONTINUOUS PERFECT PERFECT CONTINUOUS
PRESENT
FORM
S+V in the Present
form
S+am/is/are+ V 'ing'
form
S+has/have+ past
participle form of
the verb
S+has/have+
been+ 'ing' form
AFFIRMATIVE He writes a letter. He is writing a letter. He has written a
letter.
He has been
writing a letter.
NEGATIVE He does not write
a letter.
He is not writing a
letter.
He has not written a
letter.
He has not been
writing a letter.
INTERROGATIVE Does he write a
letter?
Is he writing a letter?
Has he written a
letter?
Has he been
writing a letter?
Past Tense
TENSE SIMPLE CONTINUOUS PERFECT PERFECT
CONTINUOUS
FORM S+V in the
Past
S+was/were+
'ing' form
S+had
+past
participle
S+had+been+
'ing' form.
AFFIRMATIVE He wrote a
letter.
He was writing a
letter.
He had written
a letter.
He had been
writing a letter.
NEGATIVE
He did not write
a letter.
He was not
writing a
letter.
He had not
written a
letter.
He had not been
writing a letter.
INTERROGATIVE
Did he write a
letter?
Was he writing a
letter?
Had he written
a letter?
Had he been
writing a letter?
FUTURE TENSE
TENSE SIMPLE CONTINUOUS PERFECT PERFECT
CONTINUOUS
FORM S+will/shall+ root
verb
S+will/shall+be+
'ing' form
S+will/shall+
have+past participle
S+will/shall+
have+been+
'ing' form
AFFIRMATIVE He will write a
letter.
He will be writing a
letter.
He will have written a
letter.
He will have
been writing a
letter.
NEGATIVE He will not write a
letter.
He will not be
writing a letter.
He will not have
written a letter.
He will not have
been writing a
letter.
INTERROGAT
IVE
Will he write a
letter?
Will he be writing a
letter?
Will he have written a
letter?
Will he have
been writing a
letter?
Sample Exercise 1:
Complete the following sentences using appropriate forms of the verbs given in the
brackets :
Mary and Jane are twin sisters. When they were born (be born) their mother died (die). They
were separated (be separated) Mary went (go) to live in France and Jane to England. They are
(be) 16 years old now and they haven’t seen (not see) each other since they were (be) 3 years
old. Nowadays they are (be) in touch, they write (write) letters twice a month. They speak
(speak) different languages but Mary is learning or has been learning (learn) English, Jane
has been learning (learn) French for 3 years now to be able to communicate. They discovered
(discover) they were sisters when they saw (see) a picture at school while they were doing (do)
an international student exchange. Next summer they are going to visit (visit) Germany together.
Sample Exercise 2:
In humans, the sense of balance (a) …………………… by a complicated set of relationships
between the eyes, ears, skeletal and central nervous systems, and the brain, which
(b)………information from all these senses. Balance problems (c) ……………….. when the
brain (d) ………..conflicting information from the different sense organs, or when disease (e)
……… one or more of these organs. Of all the organs that (f)………..maintain the sense of
balance perhaps the most important is the ear. Let’s examine the ear’s anatomy to understand
how the ear (g)……………..us to maintain our sense of balance. The outer ear which (h)
……………… of the visible part of the ear and the ear canal primarily (i)……………………
the hearing system. It (j) ……………… as a type of preamplifier by collecting sounds from the
environment and funneling them to the eardrum.
(a) i) maintained; ii) maintains; iii) is maintained; iv) has maintained
(b) i) is processing; ii) processes; iii) process; iv) processed
(c) i) are occurring; ii) occurs; iii) can occur; iv) will be occurring
(d) i) receive; ii) receives; iii) is receiving; iv) was receiving
(e) i) affects; ii) is affecting; iii) affected; iv) affect
(f) i) are helping; ii) helps; iii) help; iv) have helped
(g) i) will help; ii) helps; iii) is helping; iv) will be helping
(h) i) is consisting; ii) consist; iii) consists; iv) consisted
(i) assisted; ii) assists; iii) is assisting; iv) has assisted
(j) i) acts; ii) is acting; iii) acted; iv) has acted
Solutions
a) is maintained
b) processes
c) can occur
d) receives
e) affects
f) help
g) helps
h) consists
i) assists
j) acts
Sample Exercise:
On my first day at work I was a bit nervous. I got up early, had a shower, and drank some coffee. I was
too nervous to eat. I thought I was looking / looked very smart. I was wearing a suit and my best shoes.
I walked to the bus stop and waited for the bus. While I was waiting, I noticed that people were looking
at me in a strange way. I tried to ignore them, and when my bus arrived I got on and found a seat. 30
minutes later, I arrived at my office. Just as I got off the bus, I looked down and realised that I was
wearing shoes of different colour.
MOMENTS – Chapter 2: The Adventures of Toto
Ruskin Bond
Wrenched (v) – pulled
Prodded (v) – pushed
Halter (noun) – rope
Apparent (adv) - visible
Spite (noun) – a desire to annoy or hurt someone
Answer the following questions:
Q.1 How does Toto come to grandfather’s private zoo?
Ans. Toto was in the captivity of a tonga driver. He used to keep the little red monkey tied to
a feeding-trough and the monkey looked so out of place there, that grandfather decided to add
the little fellow to his private zoo. He purchased it from the tonga driver for the sum of five
rupees.
Q.2 “Toto was a pretty monkey.” In what sense is Toto pretty?
Ans. Toto was a pretty monkey. His bright eyes sparkled with mischief beneath the deep- set
eyebrows, and his teeth, which were pearly white, were very often displayed in a smile that
frightened the life out of elderly Anglo-Indian ladies. His hands looked dried-up as though they
had been pickled in the sun for many years. Yet his fingers were quick and wicked and his tail,
while adding to his good looks served as a third hand. He could use it to hang from a branch
and it was capable of scooping up any delicacy that might be out of reach of his hands.
Q.3 Why does grandfather take Toto to Saharanpur and how? Why does the ticket
collector insist on calling Toto a dog?
Ans. Toto was a real menace for every living soul in the household. Other animals in
grandfather’s zoo were at Toto’s mercy even during night. So, grandfather decided to provide
some relief to other animals in the zoo and thought of taking Toto to Saharanpur to collect his
pension the next day. A black canvas kit – bag was provided for Toto with some straw at the
bottom which became his new abode. When the bag was closed, there was no escape and Toto
could not get his hands through the opening, and the canvas was too strong for him to bite his
way through. Toto remained in the bag as far as Saharanpur but while grandfather was
producing his ticket at the railway turnstile, Toto suddenly poked his head out of the bag and
gave a ticket collector a wide grin.
The ticket collector insisted on calling Toto a dog as there seemed to be no rule for fixing a
monkey’s fare in his rule book. He received three rupees as his fare.
Q.4 How does Toto take a bath? Where has he learnt to do this? How does Toto almost
boil himself alive?
Ans. Toto takes bath in a large bowl of warm water given by grandmother. He puts his legs
in the water one by one until he is into the water up to his neck. He applies soap as well. As
monkeys are good at imitating others, so Toto has learnt proper steps of bathing while watching
the narrator doing the same. As Toto is fond of bathing with warm water, once Toto almost
boils himself alive. He sits in the large kitchen kettle that has been left on fire to boil for tea.
He decides to remove the lid and finding the water just warm enough for a bath, gets in with
his head sticking out of the kitchen kettle. This was just fine for a while until the water began
to boil. Toto then continued hopping up and down for some time until grandmother arrived and
hauled him, half boiled out of the kettle.
Q.5 Why does the author say, “Toto was not the sort of pet we could keep for long”?
Ans. Though Toto was pretty and clever, he was very mischievous. He brought a lot of damage
to the house by breaking dishes, tearing clothes and curtains. He also scared the visitors by
tearing holes in their dresses. Furthermore, he didn’t get along well with other animals in the
house too. One day Toto crossed the limits by picking up a dish of pullao and running on a
branch to eat it. When scolded he threw off the plate and broke it. That’s when grandfather
decided he had had enough of Toto because he couldn’t bear the losses that he incurred because
of Toto’s mischief.
HOTS
1. What kind of a person was the narrator’s grandfather? Do you think he was an animal
lover?
2. If there is a part of the brain especially devoted to mischief, that part was largely
developed in Toto. Do you agree? Give reasons for your answer.
BEEHIVE Chapter – 5: The LittleGirl
Word meanings
Stutter (v) : unable to speak properly
Wretched (adj): unhappy
Hue & cry (n): angry, protest
Nightmare (n): bad dream
snuggled (verb) - moved into a warm, comfortable position, close to another person
Short Questions Answers
Q.1 What was Kezia’s father’s routine
(a) before going to his office
(b) after coming back from his office
(c) on Sunday’s?
Ans. (a) Before going to his office Kezia’s father came into her room and gave her a casual
kiss.
(b) After coming from office Kezia’s father went into the drawing room and called
loudly for tea and newspaper.
(c) On Sundays Kezia found her father stretched out on the sofa, his handkerchief on
his face, his feet on one of the best cushions, sleeping soundly and snoring
Q.2 Why was Kezia afraid of her father?
Ans. Kezia was afraid of her father because he was very strict who always used to give
commands to everybody else in the house. He never played with her. He had so big, his
hands and his neck, especially his mouth, when he yawned. She was especially
terrified with the manner in which he looked at her over his spectacles.
Q.3 In what ways did Kezia’s grandmother encourage her to get to know her father
better?
Ans. Kezia’s grandmother encouraged her to get to know her father better by sending her
to the drawing room to talk to her parents on Sundays. She also suggested Kezia to
make a pin cushion ouut of a beautiful piece of yellow silk as a gift for her father’s
birthday.
Q.4 Kezia’s efforts to please her father resulted in displeasing him very much.
How did this happen?
Ans. Kezia’s efforts to please her father resulted in displeasing him. On every Sunday, her
grandmother sent her down to the drawing room to have a nice talk with father and mother. But heer presence always irritated the father. He used to call her 'little brown
owl'.
One day her grandmother told her that her father's birthday would be next week and
suggested t hat she should make him a pin-cushion for giving him a beautiful gift.
After stitching three sides of the cushion with double cotton with great care and effort,
Kezia was stuck as to what to fill the cushion with. Since her grandmother was busy
in the garden, she searched her Mother's bedroom for scraps. Finally, she discovered
sheets of paper on the bed table. She gathered those, tore them up and filled the
cushion with the torn pieces.
Unfortunately, her efforts to please her father not only went in vain but also had an
unanticipated consequence. This was because the sheets she had torn were her
father’s speech for the Port Authority. Her father scolded her for touching things that
did not belong to her and punished her by hitting her palm with a ruler.
Q.5 Kezia decides that there are “different kinds of fathers”. What kind of father
was Mr Macdonald, and how was he different from Kezia’s father?
Ans. Kezia compared her father with Mr. Macdonald, her next-door neighbour. He was a
loving, gentle and forgiving father. He always smiled and played with his children.
He treated his children in a friendly manner.
He was just opposite to Kezia's father. Unlike Kezia's father he never punished his
children. He played with them whenever he was free. Kezia's father was very harsh
and a strict disciplinarian.
Q.6 How does Kezia begin to see her father as a human being who needs her sympathy?
Ans. With her mother and grandmother at the hospital, Kezia is left at home in the care of
Alice, the cook. At night, after she is put to bed by the cook, she has a nightmare- the
butcher with a knife and a rope who came nearer and nearer. She woke shivering
and saw her father beside her bed with a candle in his hand. On hearing the dream,
he blew the candle and carried the child in his arms to his big bedroom. He then
carefully tucked up the child and lay beside her. Kezia crept close to him, snuggled
her head under his arm and held tightly to his shirt. Her father told her to rub her
feet against his legs to make them warm. Tired of his work, her father goes off to
sleep before her. This makes her understand that he has to work hard every day and this
leaves him too tired to be like Mr Macdonald. She expresses her altered feelings for
her father by telling him that he has a 'big heart'. Since then, she begins to see her
father as a human being who needs her sympathy.
HOTS
Q.1 Every father has a love for his child whether he expresses his love or not.
Comment on the basis of the story “The Little Girl”.
Q.2 How can you say that punishments given by parents hold love for you?
MODALS The finites which express the mode or manner of the actions denoted in the principal verb are
termed as modals.
Nature of Modals:
Modals can never be used alone.
Modals don’t change according to the number or person of the subject.
Modals don’t have the infinitive form.
LISTS OF MODALS
Modal Uses
Can/can’t Ability, possibility, probability, seeking permission, request, offer
Could/ couldn’t seeking permission, request, suggestion, possibility, probability, past ability
May Request, offer, permission, possibility ,probability, wish/desire
Might Future possibility
Will/won’t Intention, offer, request, prediction, promise.
Would/wouldn’t Permission, request, invitation, preference.
Shall Offer
Should Recommended action, advice.
Ought to Advice, probability.
Must /mustn’t Obligation, necessity
Need Necessity, compulsion, insistence.
Exercises:
(A) Complete the following passage using suitable modals:
You (a)……… help the teacher to maintain a near and organised classroom. You (b)……….
regularly inspect classrooms and (c)………. assign duties to class monitors to participate. You
(d)……….. ensure drinking water is provided to all. You (e)………. impose a fine on students found
littering.
Answers: (a) must (b) should (c) can (d) must (e) may
(B) In the following passage, one modal needs to be inserted in each line. Write the missing
modal.
Before Missing After
Let’s go shopping. I have to buy many things.
(a) I believe I get them all in this shop. I can get
(b) You see, I buy a present for my friend. I have to buy
(c) What we look at first? What shall we
(d) Gloves. I think they be on this floor. they might be
(e) I see just the kind we want. I can see
(f) You try these on. You should try
(C) Choose the right forms have to, don't have to, can, can't, should or shouldn't to complete the
following sentences.
1. You …………… shout at the children. It frightens them.
2. I’m sorry but you ……………. bring your dog in here. It’s forbidden.
3. You ……………. stay in the library till eight o’clock. It’s open all evening.
4. I think you ………….. think carefully before you sell the house.
5. You …………… buy a new alarm clock. This one is broken.
6. You …………… wear a uniform at my new school.
7. We ………….go now or we’ll be late.
8. She …………. dance very well but she can’t sing.
Answers:
1. You shouldn’t shout at the children. It frightens them.
2. I’m sorry but you can’t bring your dog in here. It’s forbidden.
3. You can stay in the library till eight o’clock. It’s open all evening.
4. I think you should think carefully before you sell the house.
5. You should buy a new alarm clock. This one is broken.
6. You don’t have to wear a uniform at my new school.
7. We have to go now or we’ll be late.
8. She can dance very well but she can’t sing.
Beehive - Chapter 2: The Road Not Taken (Poem)
Robert Frost
Word Meanings:
Diverged(v) – separated and took a different direction
Undergrowth(noun) – dense growth of plants and bushes
Wanted wear(adj.) – had not been used
Hence(adv.) – here, in the future
Trodden(v) – crush down with your feet
Introduction: First published in 1916, “The Road Not Taken” shows Frost at his best as a pastoral
poet who combines rustic simplicity with hidden, indirect and implied meanings. Rhyming abaab, the
poem has remarkable simplicity and clarity of style and language.
Theme of the Poem
“The Road Not Taken” deals with the dilemmas that man faces in life. The two roads serve as a
metaphor for the choices we make in life. Life throws up many alternatives. Man being an individual
cannot take up all choices. The choice we make has a far reaching consequence. Hence, our decision
is a shot in the dark though our future is dependent on it. If the choice made by us happens to be not
correct, we have to face the consequences as steps once taken cannot be retracted.
Message
Robert Frost’s poem “The Road Not Taken” seems to hold out the moral that life is a continuous
journey full of divergence every now and then. The important thing is to move on without looking
back whether the choice of paths taken was right or wrong. The right or the wrong are relative terms.
We cannot get everything in life and have to make choices.Whatever direction our life takes is
determined by the choice made by us. Make a wise choice and be firm. Keep on moving without
being in a dilemmatic condition. Be confident of your choices.
LITERARY DEVICES
Alliteration-It is “the repetition of consonant or consonant sounds in the beginning of the words.” It
gives a musical effect and also enhances the poem’s stress.
Example: grassy and wanted wear
(‘w’ sound is repeated)
Symbolism
The two roads described by the poet are the symbols of the challenges and choices that
life offers. The beaten-track symbolizes the easier path and the less travelled road is a
more challenging path. The selection of the difficult road by the poet symbolizes
man’s urge to live life boldly.
Assonance
It is a figure of speech in which the same vowel sound repeats within a group of
words. Assonance occurs when sounds repeat, not letters.
Example: Two roads diverged in yellow wood
the ‘o’ sound is repeated in ‘roads’ and ‘yellow’.
Personification
It is the giving of human characteristics to non human/non living things.
Example: Because it was grassy and wanted wear
In this line the path is given a human quality. This qualifies as Personfication.
Metaphor:
It is an indirect comparison made between two unlike objects.
Example: Two roads diverged in a yellow wood
Here, there is indirect comparison between the ‘wood’ and man’s life. Also, ‘roads’ are compared to
the decisions made by man at different junctions of life.
Simile:
It is the direct comparison made between two objects using ‘as’ or ‘like’
Example: ‘just as fair’
It shows how the poet has linked the road less taken to the easy way.
Anaphora:
Here, words repeat at the beginning of successive phrases or sentences to create a
special effect.
Example: And sorry I could not travel both
And be one traveller long I stood
And looked down one as far as I could
Repetition:
It means the repetition of words and phrases to increase the musical effect of the poem.
Example: ‘Yet knowing how way leads on to way’
‘Somewhere ages and ages hence’.
Onomatopoeia:
These are words that sound like the objects or actions they refer to and are used for poetic effect.
Example: I shall be telling this with a sigh.
‘Sigh’ is used for poetic effect.
Answer the following questions:
Q.1 Where does the traveller find himself? What problem does he face?
Ans. The traveller finds himself in the yellow woods at a point where the road forks into two. The
problem that he faces is that he cannot decide which road to take to continue his journey since it is
not possible for him to travel both the roads at the same time.
Q.2 Discuss what these phrases mean to you.
(i) a yellow wood
(ii) it was grassy and wanted wear
(iii) the passing there
(iv) leaves no step had trodden black
(v) how way leads on to way
Ans. (i) Yellow wood symbolises the autumn season. As Autumn corresponds to the withering of the
old leaves, the poet could be symbolically talking about the later stages of life of a man.
Ans. (ii) It conveys that the road was full of grass and less travelled one. The poet personifies the
road by saying ‘wanted wear’. It could imply the road needed to be explored or travelled as only very
few have done so.
Ans. (iii) The phrase is used with respect to the path he chose to walk or rather is used as ‘while
walking on the path’.
Ans. (iv) The poet uses this phrase to lay emphasis on the fact that he was unable to decide which
path to choose. Both the paths seemed to be the same, as the leaves had not changed their colour into
black by people walking on them. Figuratively, it could represent a dilemma to choose one path over
the other for the fear of uncertainty.
Ans. (v) The phrase is used in continuation to the idea that the poet wanted to return and try the first
road for another day. But he soon realizes how one way leads to another. Figuratively, this phrase
means how certain decisions one makes in life could pave the way for many other decisions.
Q.3 Is there any difference between the two roads as the poet describes them?
(i) in stanzas two and three?
(ii) in the last two lines of the poem?
Ans. (i) In stanza two, the poet explains that the only difference between the two roads was that the
road he took had the right to be chosen (the better claim) because it was covered with grass and
looked as if it had not been used too much. Besides this difference, both roads had been equally worn
down by passers-by travelling on them. In Stanza three, the poet says that both the roads were equally
covered with leaves and that no person had stepped on.
Ans. (ii) In the last two lines of the poem, the poet says that there is a difference between the two
roads because he took the road that was less travelled by other people and that made all the difference
to his journey.
Q.4 What do you think the last two lines of the poem mean? (Looking back, does the poet regret
his choice or accept it?)
Ans. The last two lines of the poem mean the acceptance of reality. The poet made a choice and
accepted the challenging path. He took an unexplored path in his life. He wanted to do something
different, so he chooses the less travelled road. He is not disappointed by his decision. For a common
man, the phrase reflects the everyday dilemma one must face to make different choices. No matter,
how far the choices takes a man in life, one shouldn’t regret about not taking the other path and
wondering if the life could have been better than what it is. The poet did not feel happy with the
decision. He revealed with a sigh of regret that his choice has shaped his life differently. Life could
have been better had he taken the beaten track.
Q.1 Have you ever had to make a difficult choice (or do you think you will have difficult choices
to make)? How will you make the choice (for what reasons)?
Ans. No, till now I have never been in a situation in which I had to make a difficult choice. Perhaps, I
am still too young to make an independent choice. Yes, I think sooner or later I will have difficult
choices to make. After completing my general education, I will have to make choice of profession
whether I should become an engineer or doctor or something else. I will have hundreds of options
before me. I will make choice according to my capabilities and strong points at that point of time. I
will choose a path that gives me satisfaction and mental peace. I will not join the rat race for money.
Like the poet in poem, I will choose a challenging and unexplored path in my life.
Q.2 After you have made a choice do you always think about what might have been, or do you
accept the reality?
Ans. Taking a decision sometime can make or break our future. Having made a choice, accept the
reality. Reconsidering a decision or contemplating over it is not a positive approach towards life.
Such thoughts never allow us to be happy with what we have gained from our decision. Therefore, I
believe in sticking to my decisions.
HOTS
1. Robert Frost chose a road that was less travelled by. What does this choice show about his
character?
2. Do you think people should regret their choices and decisions once they have been made?
Why not?
Diary Entry
A Diary is a journal organized by day, date and time where you express your thoughts,
feelings, opinions, and plans. It usually involves the regularized recording of personal
feelings and reflections on a topic. An entry is made in the diary, so that the day with
its accompanying emotions may be remembered. If you don’t know where to start, start
by writing about your day, about yourself, and so on…
FORMAT
• Day/Date
• Time
• A Suitable Heading(optional)
• Contents in an impersonal manner
• Dear Diary (optional)
• Your name
Points to remember:
• Always mention the Day, Date and Time.
• Words like Dear Diary can be used.
• Choose a subject (optional)
• Always address your entries in the first person.
• Write the events in the correct order.
• Write about your feelings in detail and explain why you feel that way.
• It should not record weather records, recipes , reminders etc.
• It should be an honest and truthful observation of oneself.
• Record or write something that really inspires you and which you
would like to read later.
• Make it a habit.
Sample Questions:
1. You are Ram/ Ramya. You have just received the news that you are one of the 10 finalists who
have been selected for a Teen Talent Hunt Show. Your excitement knows no bounds. Record your
emotions in the form of a diary entry in about 100-120 words.
Monday, 27th April 2021
9:30 pm
Teen Talent Show
Dear Diary
Today is one of the happiest days of my life. My God! I can’t believe that I have been selected for the
finals of the Teen Talent Show. My hard work has finally paid off.
When I started preparing for the auditions two years ago, no one, not even my parents, believed that I
would make it to the final. But I am glad that my mother stood by me. But for her help I wouldn’t be
here today. Right now my only concern is proving my mettle in the finals. I want to be the winner and
I am going to work doubly hard to achieve my goal. My teachers told me that my success would be
an inspiration for other students. May that be true! And I am sure that my hardwork will bring me
success.
Ram/Ramya
2. You are Vaibhav/ Vaibhavi. Today your school took you to an old-age home in the city. You met
and talked to a few people who expressed their sorrows and disappointments in life. Your heart is
heavy and you feel that old people should live with their families. Write a diary entry expressing
your feelings in not more than 120 words.
Wednesday, 29th April 2021
9.00 p.m.
Dear Diary
Today our school took us to an old-age home at Shahibaug in the city. It was well- maintained with
all the facilities which are provided in a hotel. There was also a doctor in attendance. There we met
and talked to a few elderly people. They were not feeling at home there. They expressed their serious
disappointments in life. They were neglected by their families and were living away from their
homes. Although they had made many friends there, but did not seem to be very happy. Our heart
became heavy to see them being neglected by their family members and we felt that the old people
should live with their family. I feel that it should be the duty of all to look after their old parents and
grandparents. As they are the roots of the family tree, they should also be treated as the other
members of the family.
Vaibhav/Vaibhavi
Practice Questions:
1. You are Manan/ Manvi. You participated in a play at the National School of Drama. It was
recorded and will be telecast next week. Make a diary entry using the following clues in 100-120
words:
* Great actors
* experienced and seniors
* learnt a lot
* waiting for the show to be telecast on TV
* excited
* learnt controlled actions
* playful practice
2. You are Ankit / Ankita, member of Dolphin Swimming school. You saved a small girl from
drowning in the pool where you were practising. Write your experience of brave act and feelings in
the form of diary entry in about 100 – 120 words.
Beehive – Chapter-1: The Fun They Had
Isaac Asimov
Word Meanings:
scornful (adj.) - contemptuous
slot (noun) – a given space, time or position
geared (verb) – adjusted to a particular standard or level
loftily (adv) – in a superior way
nonchalantly (adv) – carelessly
Answer the following short answer type questions:
Q.1 What kind of teachers did Margie and Tommy have?
Ans. Margie and Tommy had mechanical teachers. They were large, black and ugly and flashed on
large black screens on which all the lessons were shown and questions were asked. These mechanical
teachers had a slot in which the students had to put their homework. Students had to write their
answers in a punch code and the mechanical teacher calculated the marks immediately.
Q.2 Why did Margie’s mother send for the County Inspector?
Ans. Margie had been given many tests in Geography by the mechanical teacher, but there was no
improvement in her performance. It only kept on worsening therefore Margie’s mother sent for the
County Inspector to find out the reason behind that.
Q.3 What did the County Inspector do?
Ans. The County Inspector was a round little man with a red face, he smiled at Margie and gave an
apple to her and started working on the mechanical teacher. He took it apart and then checked it.
Margie wished that the Inspector would not know how to put the mechanical teacher together again,
but he managed to reassemble it. He slowed down the geography sector of the teacher because it was
geared a little too quickly for an average ten-year-old.
Q.4 Why was Margie doing badly in geography? What did the County Inspector do to help her?
Ans. Margie was doing badly in geography because the geography sector of the mechanical teacher
had been geared a little too quick and she couldn't cope up with that speed. The County Inspector
rightly told her that she should not be blamed for her poor performance. The County Inspector slowed
down the geography sector of the mechanical teacher to an average ten year level. He also told Mrs.
Jones that Margie's overall progress pattern was satisfactory.
Q.5 What had once happened to Tommy’s teacher?
Ans. Once, the history sector of Tommy’s teacher had blanked out completely.
Q.6 Did Margie have regular days and hours for school? If so, why?
Ans. Yes, Margie had regular days and hours for school, because her mother believed that learning at
regular hours helped little girls learn better. That was why mechanical teacher was also on at the same
time every day except Saturdays and Sundays.
Q.7 How does Tommy describe the old kind of school?
Ans. Tommy describes the old kind of school as a special building where all kids studied together.
There hundreds of students were studying and playing together. They used to shout and laugh
together in an open yard. They had a teacher who wasn't a regular teacher but was a 'man'.
Q.8 How does he describe the old kind of teachers?
Ans. Tommy said that the old kind of teachers were men i.e. human being, who didn't stay at
anyone's house but taught the students inside a special building called school. The teachers taught the
children in groups and gave them homework and asked them questions. They were smart enough to
know all the facts.
Answer each of these questions in about 100 –150 words:
Q.1 What are the main features of the mechanical teachers and the schoolrooms that Margie
and Tommy have in the story?
Ans. Margie and Tommy had mechanical teachers flashing on large black screens on which all the
lessons were shown and questions were asked. They had a slot in which students had to put their
homework. They had to write their answers in a punch code and the mechanical teacher calculated the
marks immediately. Their schools were in their homes itself. They did not have any classmates. They
learned geography, history and arithmetic. They had regular days and hours for school. Margie's
school was right next to her bedroom. The mechanical teacher was always turned on at the same time
every day except Saturdays and Sundays because her mother said that little girls learned better when
they learned at regular hours.
Q.2 Why did Margie hate school? Why did she think the old kind of school must have been fun?
Ans. Margie hated school because it was not fun. A mechanical teacher used to teach her every day at
a fixed time. The part that she hated the most was inserting the homework in the slot of the
techanical teacher. She did not like the fact that she had to write her answers in a punch code. She
also disliked that the mechanical teacher calculated the marks immediately. She found her school
detached and uninteresting. She thought that the old kind of school must have been fun as she
imagined all the kids from the entire neighbourhood coming together, laughing and shouting in the
schoolyard. She imagined that they would sit together in the classroom and go home together at the
end of the day. They would learn the same things and could help one another with the homework and
talk about it. Also, the teachers were humans. All these aspects made her believe that the old
kind of schools must have been fun.
Q.3 Do you agree with Margie that schools today are more fun than the school in the story?
Give reasons for your answer.
Ans. Margie’s school, as described in the story, seems to be a boring place where learning is a mere
task. In comparison, schools today are more fun. Students get a chance to come out of their homes
and travel to reach school. On their way, they laugh, play and have so much fun. The schoolyard too
is a great open place where the students get a chance to interact informally with each other. They get
an opportunity to share their experiences and help each other. Their learning schedule is also flexible
and gives them enough time to have fun. They have so many extra-curricular activities which teach a
lot of skills in a fun-filled way. Their teacher is a real person who makes them sit together and
teaches them the same topic. In this way, they learn to adjust and adapt which helps them develop the
values of tolerance and cooperation. Hence, Margie’s view that schools today is more fun than her
school is totally justified.
HOTS
1. You are Margie/Tommy. You recently read a book about schools in past. Make a
diary entry in about 100–120 words expressing your longing to be part of those types
of schools.
Moments – Chapter 1: The Lost Child
Word Meanings:
Alley (noun) - narrow way
Pleaded (verb) - requested
Irresistibly (adverb) - greatly attracted
Convulsed (v) - trembled with fear
Hefty (adj.) - heavy
Answer the following questions:
Q.1 What are the things the child sees on his way to the fair? Why does he lag behind?
Ans. The child sees many things which fascinate him on his way to the fair. He sees many toy shops
on road sides. To distract him from toys, his mother shows him a flowering mustard field nearby. In
the fields, the child sees dragon flies, butterflies fluttering around the flowers. Then, while walking on
the footpath he was amazed by the insects and worms. After entering the grove where his parents
were resting, he saw cooing doves. As he neared the village with his parents, he saw huge crowds of
people going to the fair. He also came across a sweetmeat seller selling sweets like burfi and Gulab-
jamun and a little further he comes across a flower seller who was selling a garland of Gulmohar.
Walking ahead, he sees a man selling rainbowcoloured balloons. He also saw a snake charmer who
stood playing a flute to a snake. Finally, before losing track of his parents he saw a roundabout swing.
The child keeps lagging on the way because the child is fascinated by all the things he sees on his
way. At times, he stops to buy toys and at other times he stops to admire the beauty of nature –
collecting flowers, catching butterflies.
Q.2 In the fair he wants many things. What are they? Why does he move on without
waiting for an Answer?
Ans. The child wants many things in the fair. He wants toys, burfi from the sweetmeat seller, a
garland of gulmohar and rainbow coloured balloons. He wants to listen to the music of the snake-
charmer and has a keen desire to enjoy the roundabout. The boy moves on without waiting for an
answer because he knew that his request would be refused every time.
Q.3 When does the boy realize that he has lost his way? How have his anxiety and
insecurity been described?
Ans. The boy realises that he has lost his way when on reaching the roundabout, he stopped to
observe it moving in full swing, with men, women and children enjoying themselves on it. Watching
them intently he turned to his parents to ask for permission to go on the rounds but there was no reply
from them. He turned to look for them, but they were not there. He looked all around but there was no
sign of them. His anxiety and insecurity have been worded beautifully. A full, deep cry rose within
his dry throat and with a sudden jerk of his body he ran from where he stood, crying out in real fear
calling his mother and father. Tears rolled down from his eyes, his flushed face was convulsed with
fear. Panicstricken, he ran from one side to the other, in all directions, knowing not where to go. His
yellow turban came untied and his clothes became muddy. The author has captured the anxiety and
fear a child faces in such situations in minutest of the details of his body language. This helps the
reader to connect to the child’s situations at an emotional level.
Q.4 Why does the lost child lose interest in the things that he had wanted earlier?
Ans. The lost child loses interest in the things that he had wanted earlier because he was panic
stricken on being separated from his parents. All he wanted was to be united with them. All the things
that attracted him in the fair no longer appeal to him as he realizes being with parents is more
important.
Q.5 What do you think happens in the end? Does the child find his parents?
Ans. In the end, the parents, who continuously kept checking to see that he was with them right from
the beginning of their journey, may have suddenly realized that he was missing and come looking for
the lost child. The kind and understanding man who tried to console the little boy by offering him
various things at the fair might have also asked him for some description of his parents and helped
him to reunite with them.
Beehive – Chapter-2: The Sound of Music- Part – I
Evelyn Glennie Listens to Sound without Hearing It
Word meanings:
Jostle (verb) – push roughly
Daunting (adj.) – frightening
Intriguing (adj.) – fascinating and curious
Flawlessly (adverb) – without a fault or mistake
Lilt (noun) – a way of speaking
Answer the following questions:
Q.1 How old was Evelyn when she went to the Royal Academy of Music? Why was she
nervous on her way to the academy?
Ans. Evelyn was only seventeen years of age when she went to the Royal Academy of Music,
London. Her nervousness was the result of her young age and lack of exposure. Coming from
a farmland in Scotland, she had not experienced much of the world. In addition, going to a big
institute like The Royal Academy of Music with her hearing disability made her uneasy.
Q.2 When was Evelyn’s deafness first noticed? When was it confirmed?
Ans. Evelyn’s deafness was first noticed when she was eight years old. In fact, her mother
had noticed it when Evelyn had not responded to a call for a performance on the piano. Her
deafness was confirmed at the age of eleven when her poor academic performance forced her
parents to consult a specialist, who discovered that her hearing was badly impaired because of
gradual nerve damage.
Q.3 Who helped Evelyn to continue with music? What did he do and say?
Ans. Percussionist Ron Forbes helped Evelyn to continue with music. He began by tuning
two large drums to different notes. He asked her not to listen to them through her ears but to
try and sense the sound in some other manner.
Q.4 Name the various places and causes for which Evelyn performs.
Ans. Evelyn, with a hectic international schedule, gives solo performances at regular
concerts. Apart from these, she gives free concerts in prisons and hospitals. She also accords
high priority to classes for young musicians.
Q.5 How did Evelyn hear music?
Ans. When Ron Forbes tuned two drums to different notes and asked her to sense the sound
without using her ears, she realized that she could feel the higher drum from the waist up and
the lower drum from the waist down. She learnt how to open her mind and body to sounds
and vibrations. It was sheer determination and hard work. When she played the xylophone,
she could sense the sound passing up the stick into her fingertips. By leaning against the
drums, she could feel the resonances flowing into her body. On a wooden platform, she
removed her shoes so that the vibrations could pass through her bare feet and up her legs. She
herself said that music poured in through every part of her body. It tingled in the skin, her
cheekbones and even in her hair.
HOTS
1. If you work hard and know where you are going, you’ll get there,” remarks Evelyn
Glennie. What does it reveal about her character?
2. The importance of mental strength and hard work inspite of physical limitations is
undeniable for success. Explain in view of Evelyn’s success story.
Beehive – Chapter-2: The Sound of Music- Part II
The Shehnai of Bismillah Khan
Word meanings:
Replicating (verb) - redesigning
Indispensable (adj.) - without which a piece of work cannot be done
Celluloid (noun) - old fashioned way of referring to films
Conferred (verb) - given, usually an award or degree
Coveted (verb) - much desired
Answer the following questions:
Q.1 Why did Aurangzeb ban the playing of pungi?
Ans. Aurangzeb banned the musical instrument called Pungi because he did not like its shrill
and unpleasant sound.
Q.2 How is a shehnai different from a pungi?
Ans. Shehnai has a better tonal quality than pungi. It is a natural hollow stem pipe with holes
on its body and is longer and broader than the pungi. Shehnai is, in a way, an improvement
upon the pungi.
Q.3 Where was the shehnai played traditionally? How did Bismillah Khan change this?
Ans. The shehnai was traditionally played in royal courts, temples and weddings. Ustaad
Bismillah khan, an undisputed monarch of shehnai brought this instrument onto the classical
stage.
Q.4 When and how did Bismillah Khan get his big break?
Ans. Bismillah khan got his big break in 1938. The All India Radio opened in Lucknow and
Bismillah Khan played shehnai on radio. He soon became an often-heard shehnai player on
radio. He became the first Indian to greet the nation with his shehnai from the Red Fort on
15th August, 1947.
Q.5 Where did Bismillah Khan play the shehnai on 15th August 1947? Why was the
event
historic?
Ans. On 15th August 1947, Bismillah Khan played the Raag Kafi on his shehnai from the
Red Fort. The event was historical because it was played on the occasion of India's
Independence from British Rule.
Q.6 Why did Bismillah Khan refuse to start a shehnai school in the U.S.A.?
Ans. Bismillah Khan refused one of his student's request to start a shehnai school in the
U.S.A. because he was a staunch patriot and would not live away from Hindustan,
specifically, from Benaras, the River Ganga and Dumraon.
Q.7 Find at least two instances in the text which tell you that Bismillah Khan loves India
and Benaras.
Ans. The first instance is when he turned down his student’s offer to start a shehnai school in
U.S.A. inspite of a strong assurance from his student to build temples there, like those in
ndia. The second instance is when Khansaab was asked by Shekhar Gupta about moving to
Pakistan during the partition and he said that he would never leave Benaras.
HOTS
Q1 Write a note on the life and achievements of Bismillah Khan as a ‘shehnai vaadak’. What values of life do you derive from his story?
Q2 How does the author of The Sound of Music” portray Bismillah Khan as a great
patriot?
Beehive – Chapter-2: Wind (Poem)
Subramania Bharati
Word meanings:
Frail(adjective) - weak and delicate
Crumbling (verb) - breaking or falling apart into small fragments
Winnows (verb) - to blow strong air through the grain to remove the light-weighted chaff
Rafters(noun) - sloping beams supporting a roof
Steadfast(adjective)- dutifully firm and unwavering
INTRODUCTION
The poem ‘Wind’ describes the power of the wind on nature and human life. It focuses on the violent
aspects of wind that causes destruction. The fierce wind is also seen by the poet as a symbol of
adversities in life. It ends with a suggestion that if we remain strong, we can overcome any obstacles.
Written originally in Tamil by Subramania Bharati and translated by A.K. Ramanujan, this poem is
an example of modern poetry written in free verse with unequal and unrhyming lines.
THEME
The poem depicts the utterly enormous power of wind in the world and how it has the potential of
being both a destroyer and a creator. The weak and fragile cannot withstand its fury, while the strong
can use it to their advantage. The same is true of the adversities of life -those who are weak easily
break down and those who are strong take them in their stride and come out stronger. Therefore, our
attitude to life and its trials and tribulations determine our response to them.
MESSAGE
The poem ‘Wind’ inspires us to face the challenges thrown at us with grit and firm determination. We
should be strong enough to face all the hardships of life with courage. Wind symbolizes problems and
obstacles that we all face and go through at some point of time in our lives.
LITERARY DEVICES
Personification
Personification is a literary device in which the poet associates human attributes with some abstract
idea or an inanimate object or a natural phenomenon.
Examples:
You tore the pages of the books
Here the pronoun ‘you’ refers to the wind, an element of nature. The wind is addressed as if it were a
person.
He makes strong fires roar and flourish
The possessive pronoun ‘he’ has been used to refer to the Wind God who is presented as a man with
tremendous power and force that can be both destructive and productive.
Metaphor
A metaphor is a figure of speech that describes an object or action in a way that it is not literally true
but helps explain an idea or make a comparison.
Examples:
You’re very clever at poking fun at weaklings
Here the wind has been presented as a very clever and powerful being who terrifies and laughs at the
weak and helpless.
You tore the pages of the books
Here the action of the wind has been described as a mischievous act of a naughty child, who makes a
mess of everything in his/her playful but destructive way.
Anaphora
Anaphora is a poetic device in which a word or group of words is used repeatedly to create a special
effect or to emphasise something.
Examples:
Don’t break the shutters of the windows.
Don’t scatter the papers.
Don’t throw down the books on the shelf.
Here, the imperative structure beginning with ‘Don’t’ is repeated at the beginning of three
consecutive lines showing the speaker’s strong appeal to the wind not to do certain things.
You tore the pages of the books.
You brought rain again
Here, ‘You’ is repeated at the beginning of two consecutive lines.
Repetition
Frail crumbling houses, crumbling doors, crumbling rafters,
crumbling wood, crumbling bodies, crumbling lives,
crumbling hearts
Here the word ‘crumbling’ is repeated a number of times to show the extent of damage caused by a
stormy wind.
Symbolism
Apart from being one of the powerful natural forces, wind can also symbolise the adversities and
challenges of life that have the potential of causing a lot of destruction, loss of life and property and
the consequent pain. There are other important symbols that the poet has used in the poem. For
example, the symbols of ‘weak fires’ and ‘strong fires’ respectively represent people with little or no
courage and people who have strong will and tenacity. Another symbol that the poet has used is that
of wind as a winnower i.e. someone who sorts things. Winnowing is one of the functions of wind.
The wind strikes everybody and everything that comes in its way and destroys whatever or whoever
is weak. Some other symbols that have been used in the poem are – Wind as a naughty child who
likes to create mischief and ruffle things up for fun and Wind as a powerful jester who looks down
upon weaklings.
Answer the following questions:
Q.1 What are the things that the wind does in the first stanza?
Ans. When the wind blows violently, it destroys everything. It breaks the shutters of the windows,
scatters the papers around, makes the books fall down, tears their pages and brings heavy downpour.
Q.2 What does the poet say the wind god winnows?
Ans. The poet states that the wind god winnows because it is nature’s way of rejecting the frail and
unhealthy objects. In a way, the wind god separates the weak from the strong, like the chaff is
separated from the grain. It winnows the weak crumbling houses, doors, rafters, wood, bodies lives
and hearts, and then crushes them all.
Q.3 What should we do to make friends with the wind?
Ans. We can befriend the wind only by becoming as strong and forceful as it is. If we are physically
and mentally strong, we can embrace it as a friend without being afraid of its fury. Also, we need to
build strong homes with firm doors. We should have firm bodies and steadfast hearts.
Q.4 What do the last four lines of the poem mean to you?
Ans. The last four lines of the poem carry an important message about the benefits of wind and its
strength. Strong people come out stronger in the phase of difficulties and challenges, just like the
strong fires burn brighter when harsh winds blow. Thus, even the trying situations become friendly
for strong people.
Q.5 How does the poet speak to the wind—in anger or with humour? You must also have seen
or heard of the wind “crumbling lives”. What is your response to this? Is it like the poet’s
response?
Ans. The poet speaks to the wind with anger. Yes, strong winds are known to cause havoc on land.
They uproot trees, bring down houses, cause damage to boats and frighten the poor sailors and
fishermen. I opine that the wind is both constructive and destructive. It causes destruction but is also
responsible for bringing rain. It cools the land and makes the climate pleasant. Nowadays, wind
energy is harnessed for several useful purposes including, turning windmills, wind turbines and
generating electricity.
HOTS
Q.1 What challenges are posed by wind in the life of the poet and the common man?
Q.2 Does the poem reflect the human suffering being initiated by wind? Explain with examples.